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Chinese F1 GP: Hamilton hails ‘mega’ first Ferrari win | Motorsports News

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Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton leads from start to finish in the sprint race before Sunday’s Chinese Grand Prix.

Lewis Hamilton says his first Formula One sprint race win for Ferrari feels “mega” and he hopes for more after qualifying fifth for Sunday’s Chinese Grand Prix.

The seven-times world champion led from start to finish on Saturday in the sprint, only his second race for Ferrari, in a stunning response to critics after his disappointing 10th in last weekend’s Melbourne season opener.

The 40-year-old Briton managed his tyres superbly to take the chequered flag ahead of McLaren’s Oscar Piastri, who will start Sunday’s Grand Prix on pole, and Red Bull’s Max Verstappen in the 100km (62-mile) race.

It was the first time Ferrari and Hamilton, who joined from Mercedes in January, had won a sprint race since the shortened format was introduced in 2021.

“Starting from pole, starting from first in a Ferrari and winning in a Ferrari is next level, man. It’s mega,” the six-times Chinese Grand Prix winner said.

“And I definitely didn’t expect to have it at the second race.”

SHANGHAI, CHINA - MARCH 22: Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain driving the (44) Scuderia Ferrari SF-25 on track during qualifying ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of China at Shanghai International Circuit on March 22, 2025 in Shanghai, China. (Photo by Clive Rose/Getty Images)
Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain drives the Scuderia Ferrari SF-25 before the F1 Grand Prix of China [Clive Rose/Getty Images]

Hamilton, who will start the Grand Prix from fifth on Sunday, said he and Ferrari would not be getting ahead of themselves: “I know the tifosi [fans] – the team wants to win, and it means everything – but Rome wasn’t built in a day.”

The Briton felt his qualifying lap for the main event was not the cleanest and he could have been a couple of tenths quicker.

“Tonight, I’m just going to make a master plan about the win. And then I’m going to try and execute it,” he said. “That’s where my mindset is at.”

Hamilton’s teammate Charles Leclerc finished fifth and said he had set up his car slightly differently to the 105-times race winner on the other side of the garage.

“I wouldn’t really blame the car as Lewis is doing a great job,” the Monegasque said.

“I really struggle with this track historically, and there’s no exception this weekend. But it’s not an excuse, and I need to react, and qualifying will be a good start to turn things around.”

Team boss Fred Vasseur pinned the difference in their performances on how they were able to manage the tyres, noting it is easier to do so from the front rather than in the pack, where Leclerc was battling to get back past the Mercedes of George Russell.

“As soon as you are in the dirty air, you struggle to overtake,” Vasseur said. “It’s much more difficult to manage.”



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